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The Human Library

A Story Every Day in 2024 10th Feb 41/366

By Rachel DeemingPublished 2 years ago 2 min read
The Human Library
Photo by Kenny Eliason on Unsplash

"I am not going to give you community hours. Instead, I'm going to sentence you to serve 50 hours at The Human Library."

The judge looked at the youth. He believed everyone should be given a chance and Kevin, hostile, yes, but still so young, did not look like he had been given much of one so far. He could offer him that.

"That's all."

The courtroom rose on instruction and Kevin felt like he had got off lightly.

***

Emma read the details she had been given of Kevin's life: convicted of racial abuse, threat of violence, carrying a concealed weapon. He was 14. Broken home. In care. Mother absent living with new boyfriend. Father not interested.

Emma sighed. She had wanted to put him with Colin, an old army officer. Not here. Who did that leave?

Nia. Too confrontational?

She would ask her.

***

"I'm Nia."

Kevin was sat in a chair by the window with his social worker when Nia went over and sat down opposite. His posture belied an attempt to be relaxed but she could sense his nervousness and his scorn from his tapping foot and his drumming fingers.

"I'm here to tell you my story."

Kevin continued to look out of the window.

Undeterred, Nia continued with her story. She knew boys like him, pretending to be men.

"My name is Nia. I'm 20 years old and when I was 15, I was attacked."

Kevin grimaced, still looking away.

"The acid was thrown in my face by a group of lads. I didn't know them. They threw it because they didn't like the colour of my skin."

Kevin snatched a glance. He could see a face, melted, eye partially obscured by a skin graft, making it misshapen.

"They wanted to make it white. Thought acid would bleach it. Wanted to see if it would. But it didn't work. Racists don't make good chemists."

Kevin had no deep seated racism. He loathed his mum's Jamaican boyfriend and had launched himself into hatred, egged on by the wrong people.

"It hurt. Badly. But the doctors patched it up. I can see. I just look awful."

Kevin glanced again.

Nia sensed a thaw.

***

366 words

There is such a thing as The Human Library, which aims to tackle prejudice by asking people from different groups, whether racial, religious, different sexual orientation, alternative beliefs - whatever - to make themselves available for you to go and talk to. The idea is to educate yourself by speaking to someone real and connect on a human level and dispel those prejudices you may have.

I think this is a great idea.

Thank you for stopping by! If you do read this, please do drop a comment as I do like to interact with my readers.

41/366

MicrofictionPsychologicalShort Story

About the Creator

Rachel Deeming

Storyteller. Poet. Reviewer. Traveller.

I love to write. Check me out in the many places where I pop up:

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Comments (11)

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  • Rick Henry Christopher 2 years ago

    This was so moving. Nia's story really touched me. I am interested in visiting a human library. I will be googling to see if there is one in my vicinity.

  • 𝐑𝐌𝐒2 years ago

    There is such wisdom in what this Judge does. Just putting kids in the system doesn't fix them. They need genuine understanding and mentorship. This sounds wonderful! Great story!

  • Oh wow, I had no idea about this Human Library. I feel it's a very good and effective idea compared to community hours. Poor Kevin though. I don't justify what he has done but he is also a victim himself. And a child. An unwanted child. My heart goes out to all the Kevins out there 🥺

  • Marie Wilson2 years ago

    I visited a Human Library a few years ago at Toronto's Pride Festival, specifically at the Trans Booth. It was a fabulous & such a great idea. Loved your story!

  • L.C. Schäfer2 years ago

    I did not know about this. What an amazing idea. The librarians are immensely generous ❤

  • D.K. Shepard2 years ago

    Loved the premise! Each scene was so gripping!

  • John Cox2 years ago

    Wow! Dare to really 'see' the world around us in all its terror and beauty. Great writing, Rachel!

  • I agree. It's easy to think the worst of someone we don't know. It's much more difficult face to face.

  • Fantastic idea. Great writing! Wonderful work!

  • Shirley Belk2 years ago

    Beautiful concept~

  • D. J. Reddall2 years ago

    A wonderful idea in ordinary reality and an ingenious premise for a work of microfiction!

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